But viscerally, in the domain of the id, they longed to see the poor soul take the long plunge to oblivion. This they would never admit to themselves, that animal fascination with death lurking deep in the species.
Warrick sensed that same response in the group gathered near Paquette’s office—they knew that death, the real thing, lay behind that closed door. Not a corpse, but something even more exciting: the promise of death …
… by that superstar of death-dealers, a serial killer.
Sara fell in behind Warrick, and kept close as they neared the office. They both carried their flight-case-style silver crime-scene kits and had their credentials flapping loose on chains around their necks. Warrick could tell that Sara felt the vibe, too, that vicarious morbid rush, coursing through the crowd.
“Paquette’s first one on the right,” Sara said.
With virtually every eye in the place on that office door, Warrick wondered why Sara was stating the painfully obvious—unless she just wanted to hear someone’s voice (even her own) in the overt silence gripping the room.
Warrick knocked on the door and it opened a crack. He’d met David Paquette a time or two and the slice of face revealed to him was enough.
“You’re … Brown, Warrick Brown,” the slice of Paquette said.
“There’s two of us, Mr. Paquette. Sara Sidle’s with me.”
The door opened wider but Paquette blocked the way; he frowned a little. “Where’s Jim Brass?”
“This is crime lab business…. Do you mind?”
Stepping back, Paquette allowed them inside, but never did open the door all the way, and once they’d scooted through, the editor shut and leaned against it, as if the crowd outside might try to rush the place. Maybe use a bench as a battering ram. Light up old rolled-up papers, as torches….
Hadn’t the serial killer replaced the monsters of myth and movies? Perhaps due to the unique nature of Vegas—that desert oasis of fun and sun, attracting visitors and new residents from every corner of the map—the LVPD had faced more of these modern monsters than perhaps any other single department in the USA.
Nonetheless, it was a relative handful, and even Warrick Brown—the least flapable of all the CSIs, with the possible exception of Grissom—could never get used to the wholesale carnage, the literally monstrous egos, and the extremes of what had once been called evil and now seemed to be pathology.
But those “townspeople” out there? They would keep their distance; that much Warrick knew from experience—however fascinated these civilians might be, contemplating the sick mind that had sent this package into their domain, the other side of that door was as close as they wanted to get.
Two other men were crowded into Paquette’s office. One looked to be little more than a kid with stringy blonde hair and wide blue eyes, wearing jeans (in the front pockets of which his hands were wedged) and a black Slipknot T-shirt. The other one was Perry Bell’s research assistant, Mark Brower, in a white dress shirt with blue pinstripes and a blue-and-red tie with navy slacks.
“I think you know Mark,” Paquette said to Warrick.
“We’ve met,” Warrick said, nodding, then shaking Brower’s hand.
“And Sara’s an old friend,” Brower said, shaking her hand too.
From Sara’s expression, that seemed to be overstating it. But that was the atmosphere—oddly tense, forced….
Finally deciding the villagers were not a threat, the editor left his post at the door and approached his desk, gesturing to the blonde kid. “Jimmy, here, found the letter first. Jimmy Mydalson, works in the mailroom.”
The kid nodded but left his hands in his pockets; so much for the handshake ritual here, the mailroom guy too preoccupied, flicking his eyes toward the manila envelope on Paquette’s desk, as if keeping track of a coiled snake that might suddenly bite him.
“This is the item?” Sara asked, taking a step nearer the envelope.
“Part of it,” Paquette said.
“Where,” Sara said, with a sideways smile, “is the … rest of it?”
Paquette summoned a grotesque smile. “What, what’s in the envelope is, uh, only part of the … uh … package. We haven’t touched that. The package.”
“Oooh-kay,” Sara said.
“The letter, that’s underneath the envelope. Right there. All three of us have touched that, and the envelope itself.”
“Let’s slow down,” Warrick said. “Tell us what happened. Take your time.”
Paquette and Brower turned to Mydalson.
The kid looked like he wanted to bolt or barf or both. Finally, he took a deep breath, pointed a shaky finger toward the package and said, “That came into the mailroom this morning. I opened it, I read it, then I ran up to Mr. Brower, ran like hell.”
“Mark’s not even a reporter,” Sara said. “Why didn’t you go to one of the editors, or someone else higher up the food chain?”
Mydalson shrugged. “I trust Mark. He’s always friendly.”
“Okay, Mark,” Warrick said. “Over to you …”
The mailroom kid heaved a big relieved sigh, and turned to Brower, to listen to him pick up the story.
Which he did: “Jimmy brought me the letter, I read it, then we both hotfooted it up here … so David could see it.”
Sara said, “Why not take it to your boss, Mark? You’re Perry Bell’s assistant, right?”
Brower shrugged. “Perry’s in California, seeing his daughter. David’s the editor Perry reports to, so that makes David my boss in this case … and I took the package to him.”
Warrick said, “Did anyone else handle the letter besides you three?”
Head shakes all around.
“Okay—nobody panic, but we’re gonna have to print you. Got to eliminate you to hone in our bad guy. Okay?”
Head nods all around.
The two CSIs put on latex gloves. While Warrick printed first Paquette, then Mydalson, Sara moved the envelope, carefully spreading open the letter, using a forceps to smooth it and not damage the evidence any further. The paper was bond, with small precise handwriting in blue pen in perfect rows.
She read the letter once, silently, then for Warrick’s benefit, began again, aloud: “‘Captain Brass—so many years have passed, and yet you have not advanced in rank. It is as if you were frozen in time and remain unchanged. In that we are alike—I too am the same. I too am frozen in time.’”
Warrick had finished with Mydalson and was about to do Brower.
“Guys, is this really necessary?” Brower asked. “I barely touched that thing, and I got a deadline to make.”
Warrick gave the man an easy smile. “Relax, Mark—anyway, it’ll just take a few seconds, and it’ll help us zero in the perp’s prints.”
“What the hell,” Brower chuckled, stepping forward. “I’ll just look at it as research.” He held out his right hand.
Sara returned to her reading: “‘They say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. But I am not flattered. I feel violated, and so I turn to you, Captain, for justice. I want you to know, Captain James Brass, that I had nothing to do with these reckless, witless crimes. As a token of my sincerity, I am parting with a treasured souvenir.’”
Frowning in thought, Sara stopped reading and returned her attention to the manila envelope itself, which was at least eight and a half by eleven; obviously something square still took up a good portion of the bottom half of the envelope.
Warrick finished printing Brower and moved to Sara’s side.
Bending to look into the open envelope, he could see a white box maybe four inches square, a festive red ribbon wrapped around it. Sara was at his side, getting a peek herself; she glanced at Warrick, who took that as a hint.
Using his thumb and middle latexed fingers, he lifted the box out of the envelope, then studied it. After taking pictures of both the box and the letter, Warrick dusted the ribbon for prints, found none, and carefully cut it.
Then, Christmas: Warrick lifted off the top.
>
Inside the box, on a bed of cotton, lay a mummified human finger.
Paquette and Brower recoiled, and the mailroom clerk, Mydalson, jerked a hand to his mouth and ran to the door, opened it, sprinted out, knocking onlookers aside like bowling pins—all in about two seconds.
Good luck to you, kid, Warrick thought.
The white index finger was so seriously dried out, Warrick immediately wondered if they’d be able to get a print.
While Warrick took more pictures, Sara picked up the letter’s narrative:
“ ‘You will find that I am who I say I am—that I am indeed the one and only, the genuine article, no cheap imitation—once you identify my possession. I have had no part in the two murders committed recently in our city. The person behind these acts is a sad imposter trying to feel important through my power. I will not allow that. My reputation is at stake and must be protected. If you cannot protect my good name, I will.’” And it’s signed, “ ‘Capture, Afflict, Strangle.’”
Warrick shook his head. He and Sara exchanged telling glances—in front of these citizens, neither would comment, but both were wondering just how CASt intended to “protect” his good name.
“He’s an egotistical maniac,” Paquette said.
Warrick offered up the tiniest of smiles. “That may be the most accurately that phrase has ever been put to use, Mr. Paquette.”
The conversation with Jill Ganine went about the way Grissom figured it would.
“Ms. Ganine,” Grissom said to the phone, the image of the attractive brunette newscaster in his mind not an unpleasant one, “with a murder case like this, when confidential information finds its way into the media, we are concerned for a multitude of reasons.”
“Like, who you can trust, Gil? For God’s sake, call me Jill. How many times have I interviewed you? Have I ever misrepresented anything you told me? Ever betrayed a confidence?”
“No, Jill, you haven’t, and I respect that.”
“Good. Then you’ll respect me for not divulging a source.”
Grissom sighed, but didn’t let the phone hear it. “You’re compromising a case that involves a vicious killer, who is still at large—”
“You mean ‘CASt,’ or maybe you mean a copycat?”
“Jill, the person or persons who are providing you with information may very well be suspects themselves!”
“Interesting. Can I quote you?”
“This conversation isn’t going to improve, is it?”
“You know, Gil—I don’t think so.”
“Suppose I got a court order?”
“To improve the conversation, or to try to get me to reveal a source? Do you really think either one would work?”
“Probably not,” he admitted.
“But look at it this way, Gil—you can tell Jim Brass you gave it the ol’ CSI try, right? Give me a C, give me an S, give an ay-yi-yi? What does it spell?”
“Goodbye, Jill.”
Perry Bell still wasn’t answering his cell phone and Grissom was having trouble tracking down the reporter’s daughter. He finally got through to the dorm room, only to find out from Patty’s former roommate that the young woman had taken an apartment this semester. Grissom asked for the phone number, but the former roommate said she didn’t have it.
“We didn’t get along,” the roommate said. “She got really pissed at me for barfing on her rug that time. I mean, like it was my fault!”
“Barfing on her rug wasn’t your fault?”
“No way! I was drunk, wasn’t I?”
Grissom, filing away the conversation as the sociological oddity it was, thanked the roommate.
He didn’t really get anywhere until contacting Sergeant O’Riley’s old LA buddy Tavo Alvarez, who called back in half an hour with what he’d learned: It seemed Patty was using her mother’s maiden name, Lang, on her UCLA registration. From there it was nothing to get her phone number.
He tried her apartment first, but the young woman didn’t answer. Next, he tried her cell phone and she finally picked up on the third ring.
“Hello.”
She had a sweet voice with a smile in it. Faint traffic sounds made it clear she was in a car.
“Patty Lang?”
“Yes. Who’s this? I don’t recognize the voice.”
He identified himself and told her about trying to locate her father.
“Wish I could help, Mr. Grissom. Daddy called me, day before yesterday … to tell me he wouldn’t be coming out after all?”
The girl’s up-lilting sentence/questions reminded Grissom of Sara’s cadence, a Valley Girlish lilt that he rather liked, for no objective reason.
“Did he say why he cancelled seeing you?” Grissom asked.
“Yes. He said he was about to break a big story. One as big as CASt—one that would ‘put him on the map again?’”
“Did he tell you what that story was?”
She laughed once. “Do you know my father very well, Mr. Grissom?”
“Fairly well.”
“Has he ever told you about a story before it appeared in print?”
“No. You make a good point, Patty.”
Her tone turned serious. “Do you think there’s something wrong? With my father, I mean? Is he in some kind of trouble, or danger?”
With a father who worked the crime beat, Patty having this reaction seemed natural to Grissom.
“We don’t think so. We just wanted to talk to him about an ongoing investigation. Everyone seems to be under the impression he was in LA with you.”
“Well, that had been the plan. But a ‘big scoop’ came up—of course, with my father, it could be ice cream!”
She laughed, and Grissom smiled, but he could hear a shade of worry in her voice.
“Is there anything else I can help you with, Mr. Grissom?”
“No,” Grissom said. “Thanks for your time.”
“Would you … do me a favor?”
“Of course, Patty.”
“When you do see Daddy, tell him he better call me. You’ve got me kinda worried.”
“Sorry. Not my intention.”
“But it’s that kind of world, isn’t it, Mr. Grissom?”
He didn’t lie to her: “Yes it is, Patty. Thank you. Good-bye.”
“Bye!”
He cut the connection and sat back in his chair.
If Bell wasn’t in LA—if he was working on a “big scoop” here in Vegas—why hadn’t the crime writer been into the office for two days?
Or was the “story” a fabrication to give him the opportunity to kill Enrique Diaz while the world thought he was out of town? But if Perry had been trying to assemble an alibi, why would somebody who knew his way around criminal matters create such a tissue-thin one? Call the daughter, and poof—bye-bye alibi.
The longer they were unable to locate Perry Bell, the more the questions mounted. As one of the few people on the planet who might actually gain from the resurgence of this vicious serial killer, Bell had no alibi for the first murder and had disappeared completely right before the second.
Then, a keycard from Bell’s workplace turns up in the hand of the second victim. Had the victim managed to snag it from Bell, as a dying clue?
Grissom normally rejected such overly convenient and clever “clues” as something out of Ellery Queen or Agatha Christie. He was reminded of the old movie cliche—it’s quiet out there … too quiet….
Perry Bell was looking like a good suspect.
Too good.
The ride through the Delamar Mountains up 93 had been even more boring than Brass had anticipated.
As scenery, mountains did not really do it for him; the fascination some people had for rock formations missed him. And for company, Damon was only half a notch above the mountains. The NLVPD detective had two subjects: shop and professional wrestling. Brass had about as much interest in what the North Las Vegas boys were up to as he did about a sport that had a script….
After what seemed like only
one lifetime, they pulled up to the main gate of Ely State Prison. Eight buildings, broken down into four connected pairs, made up the maximum security penitentiary. Twelve-foot-high chain-link fence topped with concertina wire formed the perimeter, along with four three-story concrete guard towers at each corner.
A guard with a clipboard came out of the air-conditioned shack next to the gate, his walk that distinctive combination of authority and indifference that characterized the breed. He wore dark glasses and a campaign hat pulled down low.
Brass rolled down the window as the guard approached.
“May I help you?” the guard asked, though the subtext was: Why did you bring me out into this heat?
Brass and Damon both showed their IDs.
“We’re here to see a prisoner,” Damon said.
The guard had a no kidding expression.
Brass said, “We’re on the list.”
The guard was already checking the clipboard. “Yeah, here you are. You guys know the drill?”
“I do,” Brass said.
The guard ambled off.
Damon asked, “What is the drill?”
“Well, it starts with hurry-up-and-wait.”
They boiled in the sun for close to five minutes before the guard finally came out of the shack again and waved them forward. As he did, the gate seemed to magically open, like Oz (whether Frank L. Baum’s or HBO’s version remained to be seen) and Brass guided the car on through.
The rest of the process took the better part of half an hour before the detectives were sitting at a metal picnic table in a small concrete-block room. Their guns locked in metal drawers near the guard’s office, the two plainclothes police officers sat silently, sun streaming through the barred window to make abstractions on the table, as they waited for their guest.
After a somewhat shorter time than the ride to Ely, a key thunked in the lock and the door swung open. The young man who strolled in, followed by a guard, hardly looked like a killer; but Brass knew—too well—that killers came in many packages.
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